Greg Louganis

Greg Louganis

ActorProducerAdditional Crew
Born
January 29, 1960
Awards
0 wins, 1 nominations

Considered the greatest diver in history, Greg Louganis is the only male to win gold medals on both 3 meter springboard and 10 meter platform in consecutive Olympic Games (1984, 1988). A trained actor, dancer, model and spokesman, Greg's wide repertoire of skills keeps him in demand and in the…

Biography

Considered the greatest diver in history, Greg Louganis is the only male to win gold medals on both 3 meter springboard and 10 meter platform in consecutive Olympic Games (1984, 1988). A trained actor, dancer, model and spokesman, Greg's wide repertoire of skills keeps him in demand and in the public eye.

Full biography

Early life

Greg Louganis was adopted at 9 months by Frances and Peter Louganis, who lived in Lemon Grove, CA, just outside of San Diego. Teased and bullied as a child for the dark skin he inherited from his Samoan father and for his learning "differences," he turned to what he could do well: sport. His first love was gymnastics and by nine years old, he was a "seasoned performer on the local talent show and convalescent-home circuit," (Breaking the Surface).

In 1968, Greg's mom took him to diving practice to keep him from breaking his neck doing stunts off his backyard diving board. He wasn't crazy about the sport at first, but his interest grew when he discovered he was quite good at it.

At the age of 11, Greg entered the national Junior Olympics. During the tough competition, Greg's mom took him outside to find out why he was struggling. He told her he was afraid of letting everyone down. She reassured him, saying that he would always be her son and no matter what, she would always love him. He went back to the pool and moved from twelfth place to tie for second. Those words stayed with him and helped him through every competition in his career.

First Olympics: 1976 Montreal, silver medal, platform (16 years old)

Five years later, Greg was working with diving legend Dr. Sammy Lee. Dr. Lee helped teach Greg to be a fighter, lessons that would be invaluable later in life. At sixteen years old, Greg qualified for the 1976 Montreal Olympic Games, where he won an Olympic silver medal on 10m platform. Four years later, in peak form, Greg was one of the many athletes to suffer from the U.S. boycott of the 1980 Olympic Games. It was widely expected that he would win gold medals in Moscow.

University Years

In 1978, Greg entered the University of Miami on a full diving scholarship and studied theater as part of the BFA program. In 1980, in order to dive with coach Ron O'Brien, he transferred to UC Irvine, also on an athletic scholarship. He graduated in 1983 with a major in drama and a minor in dance. As part of the drama department, Greg was dance captain and a lead player in a production of Pippin and assistant choreographer for The Gondoliers.

Olympic Champion: Securing his place in history

At the Los Angeles Olympic Games in 1984, Greg became the second man in the history of the sport to win gold medals in both springboard and platform, the first being Pete Desjardins in 1928. Following the Olympics, Greg's life was full of appearances, exhibitions, speaking engagements, commercials and modeling. But his time to celebrate was brief; soon he was training again for what would be one of his greatest challenges.

By 1988, Greg's physique had changed a little and he was twice as old as his competition on the Chinese diving team. He had learned he was HIV-positive and was struggling with the physical and emotional toll of his status. Many people will remember the infamous scene during the diving preliminary competition at the Seoul Olympics when Greg, comfortably in first place, performed a reverse two and ½ pike and hit his head on the diving board. For most divers, an accident that severe would be competition ending, if not career ending. But not for Greg... the consummate competitor... the consummate performer.

Despite the concussion, the four stitches, the pain, and his overwhelming fear of spreading HIV, Greg continued the competition and qualified for the finals in third place. He came back in the finals to win gold in the men's three-meter springboard event. On the ten-meter platform, he was neck and neck with his Chinese opponent, 14-year-old Xiong Ni, throughout the competition. The fight for gold came down to the last dive. Xiong Ni's was near perfection, but it wasn't enough. By a difference of only 1.14 points, Greg won gold and earned the distinction of being the only man ever to win gold medals in both springboard and platform in two consecutive Olympics.

Coming out and HIV

In February 1995, Greg shocked the world when, courageously, he announced on Barbara Walter's 20/20 and The Oprah Winfrey Show that he is gay and HIV-positive. The interviews were in advance of the release of his autobiography Breaking the Surface (co-written with Eric Marcus), which detailed the struggles he'd faced on his journey to gold medal glory.

Freed from the secrets he'd carried through his life, Greg pursued his other great loves - animals and acting. He began training and showing dogs, co-authoring the book, For the Life of Your Dog, with Betsy Sikora Siino in 1999. He has appeared in eight films, including narrating a dramatization of Breaking the Surface, starring Mario Lopez. He has appeared in numerous television shows and been interviewed countless times.

Champion for all time

In the spring of 2012, Greg is living a busy life filling many roles, including mentoring the 2012 U.S. Olympic diving team, acting as Vice President for the U.S. Olympian & Paralympian Association, traveling the world as a judge for the Red Bull Cliff Diving Tour, running training camps and authoring a new book, both on creative learning and peak performance, and of course, modeling and acting. But perhaps closest to his heart is the work he does to raise awareness and support for various philanthropic organizations dealing with animals, diversity (GLBT), learning differences and HIV/AIDS.

Actor

Some Kind of WonderfulSome Kind of Wonderful(2018)as Noah
Sharknado 5: Global SwarmingSharknado 5: Global Swarming(2017)as Zico
Old Dogs & New TricksOld Dogs & New Tricks(2011)as Dirk Evans
Sabre DanceSabre Dance(2015)as Salvador Dali
EntourageEntourage(2015)as Lloyd's FiancƩe

Self

Battle of the DecadesBattle of the Decades(2023)as Self - Judge
Greg Louganis Is AliveGreg Louganis Is Alive(2023)as Self
On Thin IceOn Thin Ice(2021)as Self
The Hollywood Moment at Home EditionThe Hollywood Moment at Home Edition(2020)as Self
Holey MoleyHoley Moley(2019)as Self - Judge

Archive Footage

Old Dogs & New TricksOld Dogs & New Tricks(2011)as Dirk Evans
La Part du diableLa Part du diable(2017)as Self
Chelsea LatelyChelsea Lately(2007)as Self - Judge on 'Splash', Self - Swimmer
NaqoyqatsiNaqoyqatsi(2002)as Self
E! True Hollywood StoryE! True Hollywood Story(1996)as Self

Known for

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Photos 22

Greg Louganis, Fred Willard, and The Krofft Puppets in D.C. Follies (1987)Greg Louganis, Stephanie T. Keefer, and Bruce L. Hart in Old Dogs & New Tricks (2011)Greg Louganis in Sharknado 5: Global Swarming (2017)Greg Louganis in Breaking the Surface: The Greg Louganis Story (1997)Greg Louganis and Bud Greenspan in 16 Days of Glory (1985)Greg Louganis and Johnny Chaillot

Credit Score: Greg Louganis

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198719881989199019911992199319941995199619971998199920002001200220032004200520062007200820092010201120122013201420152016
Dan Zuma
Fri Mar 22 1996
#NameScoreYearWinNomKnownā˜…WinsNomsVotes
1It's My Party3.751996•7.1003417
2Old Dogs & New Tricks2.502011•6.800192
3Entourage2.502015•6.50085783
4Watercolors2.502009•6.4001707
5D2: The Mighty Ducks2.501994•6.10045819
6Touch Me2.381999•5.900501
7Dirty Laundry2.001988•4.200205